
.
.Lee Harvey
OSWALD
Lee Harvey Oswald
(October 18, 1939 – November 24, 1963) was, according to three
government investigations, the assassin of U.S. President
John F. Kennedy, who was fatally shot on November 22, 1963, in
Dallas, Texas.
A United States Marine who
defected to the Soviet Union and later returned, Oswald was
arrested on suspicion of killing Dallas police officer J. D.
Tippit and later connected to the assassination of President
Kennedy. Oswald denied any responsibility for the murders. Two
days later on November 24, 1963, while being transferred under
police custody from the city jail to the county jail, Oswald was
shot and mortally wounded by Jack Ruby on live television.
In 1964, the Warren Commission
concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President Kennedy
single-handedly, a conclusion also reached by prior investigations
of the FBI and the Dallas Police Department.
Childhood
Lee Harvey Oswald was born in New
Orleans, Louisiana, and was of English, German, French, Dutch, and
Irish ancestry. His father, Robert Edward Lee Oswald, Sr. (New
Orleans, March 4, 1896 – New Orleans, August 19, 1939), who had
previously been married before marrying Oswald's mother on July
20, 1933, died two months before Lee was born. Mostly on her own,
his mother, Marguerite Frances Claverie (New Orleans, July 19,
1907 – Fort Worth, Texas, January 17, 1981), daughter of streetcar conductor, John Claverie, raised Lee and his two
older siblings (his brother, Robert, Jr.; and his half-brother,
John Pic (1932–2000), Marguerite's son from a previous marriage).
Oswald had a stepfather, Edwin Adolph Ekdahl (1888–1965), from
1945 to 1948.
Lee's youth was characterized by extreme mobility; before the
age of 18, Oswald had lived in 22 different homes. Because of the
short-lived stay in each location, he had attended 12 different
schools, mostly around New Orleans; Covington, Louisiana; and
Dallas, but also in New York City. His mother placed him in a
foster home for 13 months in 1942–1943, when she was too poor to
take care of him and his brothers. As a child, Oswald was
withdrawn and temperamental. After moving in with his
half-brother, who had joined the Coast Guard and was stationed in
New York City, Lee and Marguerite Oswald were asked to leave after
an incident in which Oswald allegedly threatened Pic's wife with a
knife, and struck his mother. Following charges of truancy, he was
put under a three week court-ordered stay for psychiatric
assessment in a juvenile reformatory called Youth House. Dr.
Renatus Hartogs described Oswald as having a "vivid fantasy life,
turning around the topics of omnipotence and power, through which
he tries to compensate for his present shortcomings and
frustrations," and diagnosed the 14-year-old Oswald as having a
"personality pattern disturbance with schizoid features and
passive-aggressive tendencies" and recommended continued
psychiatric intervention.
Oswald's behavior at school appeared to improve during his last
months in New York.
In January 1954, his mother Marguerite decided to return to New
Orleans with Lee, which prevented him from receiving the care the
psychiatrist had recommended.
There was still an open question pending before a New York judge
whether or not he should be taken from the care of his mother to
finish his schooling.
Oswald dropped out of school twice. Oswald left school after
one month of 10th grade while in New Orleans.
Afterwards, the family moved back to Fort Worth and he started the
10th grade at Arlington Heights High School again. After 23 days,
he quit and joined the United States Marines. He never received a
high school diploma. A dyslexic, he had trouble with spelling and
writing coherently. Yet Oswald read voraciously and, by age 15,
claimed to be a Marxist from his reading on the topic. He wrote in
his diary, "I was looking for a key to my environment, and then I
discovered socialist literature. I had to dig for my books in the
back dusty shelves of libraries". At 16, Oswald wrote to the
Socialist Party of America, stating that he was a Marxist who had
been studying socialist principles for "well over fifteen months",
and asked for information about their youth league.
However, Edward Voebel, "whom the Warren Commission had
established was Oswald's closest friend during his teenage years
in New Orleans ... said that reports that Oswald was already
'studying Communism' were a 'lot of baloney." Voebel said that
"Oswald commonly read paperback trash."
Military service
Despite his avowed Marxist sympathies, Oswald enlisted in the
US Marine Corps on October 24, 1956, one week after his
seventeenth birthday. He idolized his older brother, Robert, and
wore Robert's U.S. Marines ring. Joining the Marines may have also
been a way to escape from his overbearing mother.
While in the Marines, Oswald was trained in the use of the
M1 Garand rifle. Following that training, he was tested in
December 1956, and obtained a score of 212,
which was 2 points above the minimum for qualifications as a
sharpshooter. In May 1959, on another range, Oswald scored
191,
which was 1 point over the minimum for ranking as a
marksman.
Oswald, however, was trained primarily as a radar operator, a
job that required a security clearance. A May 1957 document states
that he was "granted final clearance to handle classified matter
up to and including CONFIDENTIAL after careful check of local
records had disclosed no derogatory data."
Oswald took the Aircraft Control and Warning Operator Course and
finished seventh in a class of thirty. The course "...included
instruction in aircraft surveillance and the use of radar."
He was assigned first to
Marine Corps Air Station El Toro now in
Irvine,
California in July 1957,
then to
Naval Air Facility Atsugi in Japan in September 1957 as part
of
Marine Air Control Squadron 1. Atsugi was a base for the
top-secret CIA
U-2 spy planes that flew over the
Soviet Union. As a Marine radar controller, Oswald obtained
knowledge of the U-2 spy planes which he may have passed over to
the Soviets.
Oswald was court-martialed twice:
initially because of accidentally shooting himself in the elbow
with an unauthorized handgun, and then later for starting a fight
with a sergeant he thought responsible for the punishment he
received from his first court-martial. He was demoted from private
first class to private, and briefly served time in the brig.
Later, he was punished for another incident: While on sentry duty
one night in the Philippines, he inexplicably fired his rifle into
the jungle.
Small compared with some other Marines, Oswald was nicknamed
Ozzie Rabbit after the
cartoon character. For his pro-Soviet beliefs, he was also
nicknamed Oswaldskovich. In December 1958, he transferred
back to the Marine Corps Air Station El Toro.
The function of Oswald's unit at El Toro "...was to serveil [sic]
for aircraft, but basically to train both enlisted men and
officers for later assignment overseas." One of Oswald's officers,
Lieutenant John Donovan, said that Oswald was a "very competent"
crew chief.
Oswald subscribed to the Communist Party newspaper,
The Worker, and claimed to have taught himself rudimentary
Russian. At the El Toro base, in February 1959, he took the Marine
proficiency exam in written and spoken Russian and his test
results were rated "poor."
Life in
the Soviet Union
In October 1959, Oswald traveled to the
Soviet Union. He was 19, and the trip was planned well in advance.
Along with having taught himself rudimentary Russian, he had saved
$1,500 of his Marine Corps salary, got an early "hardship"
discharge by claiming he needed to care for his injured mother,
got a passport, and submitted several fictional applications to
foreign universities in order to obtain a student visa.
After spending two days with his mother in
Fort Worth, Oswald departed by ship from New Orleans on September
20, 1959, to Le Havre, France. He left for England that same day,
and arrived on October 9. He told customs officials in Southampton
that he had $700 and planned to remain in the United Kingdom for
one week before proceeding to a school in Switzerland. But on the
same day, he flew on a Finnair flight to Helsinki, Finland, where
he stayed until October 15. Oswald probably applied for a visa at
the Soviet consulate on October 12. The visa was issued on October
14. He left Helsinki by train on the following day, crossed the
Finnish-Soviet border at Vainikkala, and arrived in Moscow on
October 16.
He almost immediately announced to his
Intourist guide his desire to become a citizen of the Soviet
Union.
But when he was informed on October 21 that his application for
citizenship had been refused, Oswald made a bloody but minor cut
to his left wrist in his hotel room
bathtub. After bandaging his superficial injury, the cautious
Soviets kept him under psychiatric observation at a hospital.
When Oswald showed up unexpectedly at the United States embassy
in Moscow on October 31, he stated he wanted to renounce his U.S.
citizenship.
He told Soviet officials "...that he had been a radar operator in
the Marine Corps and that he ... would make known to them such
information concerning the Marine Corps and his speciality as he
possessed. He intimated that he might know something of special
interest."
When the Navy Department learned of this, it changed Oswald's
Marine Corps discharge from "hardship/honorable" to "undesirable".
John McVickar, one of the American consular officials at the
Moscow embassy who was in contact with Oswald, said he felt that
Oswald, "...was following a pattern of behavior in which he had
been tutored by [a] person or persons unknown ... seemed to be
using words which he had learned but did not fully understand ...
in short, it seemed to me that there was a possibility that he had
been in contact with others before or during his Marine Corps tour
who had guided him and encouraged him in his actions."
Although Oswald had wanted to remain in Moscow and attend
Moscow University, he was sent to Minsk,
then the capital of the
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic and now the capital of
Belarus. He was given a job as a
metal lathe operator at the Gorizont (Horizon) Electronics
Factory in Minsk, a huge facility that produced radios and
televisions along with military and space electronic components.
He was given a
rent-subsidized, fully furnished studio apartment in a
prestigious building under Gorizont's administration and in
addition to his factory pay received monetary subsidies from the
Russian
Red Cross Society. This represented an idyllic existence by
Soviet-era working-class standards.
Oswald was under constant
surveillance by the KGB
during his thirty-month stay in Minsk.
Oswald gradually grew bored with the limited recreation
available in Minsk.
He wrote in his diary in January 1961: "I am starting to
reconsider my desire about staying. The work is drab, the money I
get has nowhere to be spent. No nightclubs or bowling alleys, no
places of recreation except the trade union dances. I have had
enough."
Shortly afterwards, Oswald opened negotiations with the U.S.
Embassy in Moscow over his proposed return to the United States.
At a dance in early 1961 Oswald met
Marina Prusakova, a 19-year-old
pharmacology student from a broken family in Leningrad (now
Saint Petersburg) who was then living with her aunt and uncle
in Minsk.
Lee and Marina married on April 30, 1961, less than six weeks
after they met. Their first child, June, was born on February 15,
1962.
After nearly a year of paperwork and waiting, on June 1, 1962
the young family left the
Soviet Union for the United States. Even before November 22,
1963, Oswald received a small measure of national notoriety in the
U.S. press as an American who had defected to the U.S.S.R. and
returned.
In 1964, Oswald's mother, Marguerite, recorded and released an
album on
Folkways Records reading and commenting on his letters from
his time in Soviet Union. It was entitled,
The Oswald Case:
Mrs. Marguerite Oswald Reads Lee Harvey Oswald's Letters from
Russia.
Dallas
Back in the United States, the Oswalds settled in the
Dallas/Fort Worth area, where his mother and brother lived,
and Lee attempted to write his
memoir and commentary on Soviet life, a small manuscript
called The Collective. He soon gave up the idea but his
search for literary feedback put him in touch with the area's
close-knit community of anti-Communist Russian émigrés. While
merely tolerating the belligerent and arrogant Lee Oswald, they
sympathized with Marina, partly because she was in a foreign
country with no knowledge of English (which her husband refused to
teach her, saying he didn't want to forget Russian) and because
Oswald had begun to beat her.
Although the Russian émigrés
eventually abandoned Marina when she made no sign of leaving him,
Oswald had found an unlikely friend in the well-educated and
worldly petroleum geologist George de Mohrenschildt. A native
Russian-speaker himself, de Mohrenschildt wrote that Oswald spoke
Russian "very well, with only a little accent." Marina meanwhile
befriended a married couple: Ruth Paine, who was trying to learn
Russian, and her husband Michael.
In Dallas in July 1962, Oswald got a job with the Leslie
Welding Company, but disliked the work and quit after three
months. He then found a position in October 1962 at the graphic
arts firm of Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall as a photoprint trainee. He
may have used photographic and typesetting equipment in the
unsecured area to create falsified identification documents,
including some in the name of an alias he created, Alek James Hidell. His co-workers and
supervisors eventually grew frustrated with his inefficiency, lack
of precision, inattention, and rudeness to others, to the point
where fights had threatened to break out.
He had also been seen reading a Russian publication,
Krokodil,
in the cafeteria.
He lost his job in the first week of April, probably April 6, due
to incompetence.
Attempted assassination of General Walker
The Warren Commission concluded that on April 10, 1963, Oswald
attempted to assassinate retired Major General Edwin Walker, and
that Oswald probably used the rifle shown in his backyard pose
photos of March 31. (The United States House Select Committee on
Assassinations stated that the "evidence strongly suggested" that
Oswald did the shooting.) This date is only a few days after
Oswald had lost his job.
General Edwin Walker was an
outspoken anti-communist, segregationist and member of the John
Birch Society who had been commanding officer of the Army's 24th
Infantry Division based in West Germany under NATO supreme command
until he was relieved of his command in 1961 by JFK for
distributing right-wing literature to his troops. Walker resigned
from the service and returned to his native Texas. He became
involved in the movement to resist the use of federal troops for
securing racial integration at the University of Mississippi,
resistance that led to a riot on October 1, 1962 in which two
people were killed. He was arrested for insurrection, seditious
conspiracy, and other charges, but a local federal grand jury refused to indict Walker.
Oswald considered Walker a
"fascist" and the leader of a "fascist organization." In March
1963, Oswald purchased a 6.5 mm caliber Carcano rifle (also
commonly but improperly called Mannlicher-Carcano) by mail order,
using the alias "A. Hidell." He also purchased a revolver by the
same method.
The Warren Commission concluded that Oswald attempted to shoot
General Walker with his rifle, while Walker was sitting at a desk
in his dining room. Oswald fired at him from less than one hundred
feet (30 m) away. Walker survived only because the bullet struck
the wooden frame of the window, which deflected its path, but was
injured in the forearm by bullet fragments. Oswald returned home
and told Marina what he had just done.
General Walker's brush with death was reported nationwide. The
Dallas police had no suspects in the shooting.
Oswald's involvement in the attempt on Walker's life was
suspected within hours of his arrest on November 22, 1963,
following the Kennedy assassination.
But a note Oswald left for Marina on the night of the attempt,
telling her what to do if he did not return, was not found until
early December 1963, after which Marina told authorities about
Oswald and Walker.
The bullet was too badly damaged to run conclusive ballistics
studies on it,
though
neutron activation tests later showed that it was "extremely
likely" that the Walker bullet was from the same cartridge
manufacturer and for the same rifle make as the two bullets which
later struck Kennedy.
New Orleans
Oswald
returned to New Orleans on April 25, 1963 and got a job as a
machinery greaser with the Reily Coffee Company in May. Oswald's
wife, Marina, joined him in New Orleans, after being driven there
by family friend Ruth Paine. In July, Oswald was fired from Reily
for malingering.
On May 26, 1963, Oswald, without any previous contact with the
FPCC, and with no membership in the Communist Party USA, wrote a
letter to the New York City headquarters of the
Fair Play for Cuba Committee, a pro-Castro organization, and
proposed "...renting a small office at my own expense for the
purpose of forming a FPCC branch here in New Orleans." The FPCC
Chairman replied, rejecting Oswald's proposal and later commented
on its suspicious nature. In that letter, Oswald also claimed to
have had a public brawl with a Cuban refugee, although that fight
would not occur for two weeks.
On August 5 and 6, according to
Carlos Bringuier, Oswald visited him at a store he owned in
New Orleans. Bringuier was the New Orleans delegate for the
anti-Castro Cuban Student Directorate. Bringuier told the Warren
Commission that he believed Oswald's visits were an attempt by
Oswald to infiltrate his anti-Castro group.
Three days later, on August 9, Oswald turned up in downtown New
Orleans handing out pro-Castro fliers. Bringuier confronted
Oswald, claiming he was tipped off about Oswald's leafleting by a
friend. During an ensuing scuffle, Oswald, along with Bringuier
and two of his friends, was arrested and charged with disturbing
the peace.
The arrest got news media attention and Oswald was interviewed
afterwards. He was also filmed passing out fliers in front of the
International Trade Mart with two 'volunteers' he had hired
(hired, because Oswald was not a member of the Communist Party USA
so he had no regular volunteers). Oswald's political work in New
Orleans came to an end after a WDSU
radio debate between Bringuier and Oswald arranged by journalist
Bill Stuckey. During the course of the debate, Oswald was
confronted with accusations about his past in the
Soviet Union and his activities in New Orleans.
Oswald's activities in New Orleans in mid-1963 were
investigated by New Orleans District Attorney
Jim Garrison during his
prosecution of Clay Shaw in 1969. Garrison was particularly
interested in investigating
David Ferrie's connections to Oswald, which Ferrie himself
denied. Ferrie died before he could be brought to trial. In 1993,
the PBS television program Frontline obtained a group
photograph, taken eight years before the assassination, that
showed Oswald and Ferrie at a cookout with other
Civil Air Patrol cadets.
Ron Lewis claimed that he briefly met
David Ferrie and
Guy Banister, and Lewis could have substantiated many claims
proposed by
Jim Garrison, but Lewis decided not to risk personal danger by
coming forward with his testimony during the trial of
Clay Shaw.
Mexico
While Ruth Paine drove Marina back to Dallas in late September
1963, Oswald lingered in New Orleans for two more days waiting to
collect a $33 unemployment check. It has never been conclusively
established precisely when Oswald left New Orleans, or what mode
of transportation he took. He is next known to have boarded a bus
in
Houston, but instead of heading north to Dallas, he took a bus
southwest towards
Laredo and the
U.S.-Mexico border. Once in Mexico he hoped to continue to
Cuba, a plan he openly shared with other passengers on the bus.
Arriving in
Mexico City, he completed a transit visa application at the
Cuban Embassy,
claiming he wanted to visit the country on his way back to the
Soviet Union. The Cubans insisted the Soviet Union would have
to approve his journey to the USSR before he could get a Cuban
visa, but he was unable to get speedy co-operation from the Soviet
embassy.
After shuttling back and forth between consulates for five
days, getting into a heated argument with the Cuban consul, making
impassioned pleas to KGB
agents, and coming under at least some
CIA interest,
Oswald was told by the Cuban consul that "as far as [he] was
concerned [he] would not give him a visa" and that "a person like
him [Oswald] in place of aiding the Cuban Revolution, was doing it
harm."
However, less than three weeks later, on October 18 the Cuban
embassy in Mexico City finally approved the visa, and 11 days
before the assassination Oswald wrote a letter to the Soviet
embassy in
Washington, D.C., which said, "Had I been able to reach the
Soviet Embassy in
Havana as planned, the embassy there would have had time to
complete our business."
Return to Dallas
Oswald left Mexico City on October 3, and returned by bus to
Dallas, where he looked for employment. Through Ruth Paine he
found a job filling book orders at the
Texas School Book Depository, where he started work on October
16. During the week, he lived in a
rooming house on Beckley Street in Dallas (under the pseudonym
O.H. Lee),
and spent the weekends with his wife at the Paine home in
Irving, Texas, about 15 miles (24 km) from central Dallas. On
October 20, the Oswalds' second daughter was born. During this
period, the
FBI was aware of Oswald's whereabouts in Texas, and agents
from the Dallas office twice visited the Paine home in early
November when Oswald was not present, hoping to get more
information about Marina Oswald, whom the FBI suspected of being a
Soviet agent.
In return, Oswald visited the FBI field office in Dallas
approximately 10 days to a week before the assassination, in an
attempt to speak to Special Agent
James Hosty. When informed that Hosty was not available,
Oswald left a note, which according to the receptionist at the
field office read:
- Let this be a warning. I will blow up the FBI and the Dallas
Police Department if you don’t stop bothering my wife. Signed -
Lee Harvey Oswald.
After the assassination, FBI Special Agent-in-Charge for Dallas
J. Gordon Shanklin ordered Hosty to destroy the note.
On November 16, a local newspaper reported that President
Kennedy's
motorcade would be going through central Dallas on November
22, "probably on Main Street" one block from the Texas School Book
Depository, which it would have to pass to get onto the freeway to
the President's luncheon site. This was confirmed by exact
descriptions of the motorcade route published on November 19.
On Thursday, November 21, Oswald asked Buell Wesley Frazier, a
co-worker, for a ride to Irving, saying he had to pick up some
curtain rods. The next morning, after leaving $170 and his wedding
ring,
he returned to Dallas with Frazier, carrying a long paper bag with
him.
Oswald was last seen by a co-worker alone on the sixth floor of
the depository about 30 minutes before the assassination.
Assassination
of JFK
According to Government investigations, Oswald shot
John F. Kennedy and two other people at 12:30 pm on November
22, 1963, resulting in the death of Kennedy. The 1964
Warren Commission report on the John F. Kennedy assassination
concluded that those bullets came from a 6.5 millimeter Italian
carbine with a four-power scope that Oswald fired from a window on
the sixth floor of the book depository warehouse, where he was an
employee, as the President's motorcade passed through Dallas's
Dealey Plaza.
Texas Governor
John Connally was also seriously wounded along with
assassination witness
James Tague who received a minor facial injury.
Oswald's flight and the murder of Officer J. D. Tippit
According
to the Warren Commission report, immediately after he shot
President Kennedy, Oswald hid the rifle behind some boxes and
descended four flights of stairs via the depository's rear
stairwell. On the second floor he encountered Dallas police
officer Marion Baker and Roy Truly, Oswald's supervisor, who
identified Oswald as an employee, and Baker let Oswald pass. This
encounter occurred in the second floor lunch room approximately 90
seconds after the shooting. According to Baker, Oswald was
drinking a soda and did not appear to be out of breath or nervous.
Subsequently, Oswald crossed the floor to the front staircase,
descended and left the building through the front entrance on Elm
Street, just before the police sealed off the building. Oswald was
the only employee of the Depository who permanently left the
building after the assassination; his supervisor later noticed
Oswald missing
and reported his name and address to the Dallas police in the
building.
At about 12:40 p.m. (CST), Oswald boarded a city bus, but due
to heavy traffic, he requested a bus transfer from the driver and
exited the bus two blocks later.
He took a
taxicab to his rooming house, which he entered about 1:00 p.m.
His housekeeper, Earlene Roberts, testified that as he entered "he
was walking pretty fast"."
He went into his room briefly, put on a jacket, and left. Oswald
was last seen by Roberts waiting by a bus stop on a route that
headed back to downtown Dallas.
About four-fifths of a mile (about 1.3 km) away, Patrolman
J. D. Tippit encountered Oswald on a residential street in the
neighborhood of
Oak Cliff. He pulled up next to Oswald and spoke to him
through a passenger side window.
When Tippit exited his squad car, he was shot four times with a
.38 caliber revolver, killing him in view of three eyewitnesses.
Seven other witnesses heard the shots and saw the gunman flee the
scene with the revolver in his hand.
Four cartridge cases were found at the scene by eyewitnesses. It
was the unanimous testimony of
expert witnesses before the Warren Commission and the House
Select Committee on Assassinations that these used cartridge cases
were fired from the revolver in Oswald's possession to the
exclusion of all other weapons.
A few minutes later, Oswald ducked into the entrance alcove of
a shoe store and appeared to be avoiding passing police cars.
Johnny Brewer, the shoe store's manager, had been listening to the
day's events on the radio, and felt that Oswald was acting
suspiciously. After Oswald walked away, Brewer went outside his
shop and saw Oswald slip into the nearby
Texas Theater without paying.
Brewer alerted ticket clerk Julia Postal, who had also been
listening to radio coverage of the assassination, and she phoned
the police.
The police quickly arrived en masse and entered the
theater as the lights were turned on. Brewer identified Oswald
sitting near the rear, and Officer Maurice N. McDonald approached
him and ordered him to stand up. Oswald said, "Well, it is all
over now" and appeared to raise his hands in surrender, when he
then struck the officer. A scuffle ensued where McDonald removed
the gun from Oswald's possession.
Oswald was eventually subdued. As he was led past an angry crowd
of people who had gathered outside the theater, Oswald shouted
that he was a victim of police brutality.
At about 2 p.m., Oswald arrived at the Dallas Police Department
building, where he was held on suspicion of the shooting of
Officer Tippit and was questioned by Detective
Jim Leavelle. Captain J. W. Fritz was told that the name of
the suspect in the Tippit shooting was Lee Harvey Oswald, the same
name that Fritz had received at the Texas School Book Depository
as a missing employee who had last been seen in the building
shortly after the assassination.
"That is the suspect we are looking for in the President's
killing," Fritz said.
Oswald was then booked on suspicion of murdering both President
Kennedy and Officer Tippit. By the end of the night he had been
arraigned before Justice of the Peace David L. Johnston for
both murders.
In the hallway of the police station, early in his custody,
Oswald had an impromptu, face-to-face brush with reporters and
photographers, in which he declared "I didn't shoot anyone" and
"They're taking me in because of the fact I lived in the Soviet
Union. I'm just a patsy!" Later, just after midnight, at a brief
arranged appearance before the press, a reporter asked him "Did
you kill the President?" and Oswald, who had been advised at 7:10
p.m. of the charge of murdering Tippit, but was not arraigned for
Kennedy's murder until 1:30 a.m., answered "No, I have not been
charged with that. In fact, nobody has said that to me yet. The
first thing I heard about it was when the newspaper reporters in
the hall asked me that question." Before any more questions were
asked and answered, police officers began leading Oswald out of
the room, during which two more questions came: "What did you do
in Russia?" and "How did you hurt your eye?" Oswald answered the
latter, stating "A policeman hit me."
Police
interrogation
Oswald was interrogated several times during his two days of
detention at Dallas Police Headquarters. He denied killing
President Kennedy and Officer Tippit, denied owning a rifle, said
two photographs of him holding a rifle and a pistol were fakes,
denied knowing anything about the forged
Selective Service card with the name "Alex J. Hidell" in his
wallet, denied telling his co-worker he wanted a ride to Irving to
get curtain rods for his apartment, and denied he had been seen
carrying a long heavy package to work the morning of the
assassination.
During his first interrogation on Friday, November 22, Oswald
was asked to account for himself at the time the President was
shot. Oswald said that he ate lunch in the first-floor lunchroom
of the Texas School Book Depository and then went up to the second
floor for a
Coke, during which he encountered the police officer.
During his last interrogation on Sunday, November 24, Oswald was
asked again where he was at the time of the shooting. Oswald said
he was working on one of the upper floors of the Depository when
it occurred, and that he then went downstairs, where he
encountered the police officer.
Oswald asked for legal representation several times during his
interrogations and when passing by reporters. But when
representatives of the
Dallas Bar Association met with Oswald in his cell on Saturday
afternoon, he declined their services and said he wanted to be
represented by
John Abt, who was chief counsel to the
Communist Party USA, or by lawyers who were members of the
American Civil Liberties Union.
Oswald and Ruth Paine tried to reach Abt by telephone several
times on Saturday and Sunday,
but Abt had gone away for the weekend and did not return the
calls.
Oswald also declined his brother Robert's offer on Saturday
afternoon to get him a local attorney.
Oswald's death
At
11:21 am Sunday, November 24, 1963, while he was handcuffed to
Detective Leavelle and as he was about to be taken to the Dallas
County Jail, Oswald was shot and fatally wounded before live
television cameras in the basement of Dallas Police Headquarters
by
Jack Ruby, a Dallas nightclub operator who said that he had
been distraught over the Kennedy assassination.
Unconscious, Oswald was put into an ambulance and rushed to
Parkland Memorial Hospital, the same hospital where President
Kennedy had died two days earlier. Doctors operated on Oswald, but
Ruby's single bullet had severed major abdominal blood vessels,
and the doctors were unable to repair the massive trauma. Oswald
was pronounced dead at 1:07 pm.
After a full autopsy, Oswald's body
was returned to his family. Oswald's grave is in Rose Hill
Memorial Burial Park in
Fort Worth.
The original tombstone, which included Oswald's full name and
dates of birth and death, was stolen; today, the grave is marked
by a stone which reads simply, Oswald.
His wife Marina was sequestered by federal agents the day after
the assassination and later released. However, she had Secret
Service protection until she concluded her testimony before the
Warren Commission.
Investigations
The
Warren Commission created by President
Lyndon B. Johnson on November 29, 1963, to investigate the
assassination concluded that Oswald assassinated Kennedy and that
he acted alone (also known as the
lone gunman theory). The proceedings of the commission were
closed, but not secret, and about 3% of its files have yet to be
released to the public, which has continued to provoke speculation
among researchers.
In 1968, the
Ramsey Clark Panel met in Washington, D.C., to examine various
photographs, X-ray films, documents, and other evidence pertaining
to the death of President Kennedy. It concluded that President
Kennedy was struck by two bullets fired from above and behind him,
one of which traversed the base of the neck on the right side
without striking bone and the other of which entered the skull
from behind and destroyed its right side.
In 1979, an investigation by the
United States House Select Committee on Assassinations
concluded that Oswald assassinated President Kennedy "probably
[...] as the result of a
conspiracy." The HSCA prepared an initial report concluding
that Oswald acted alone, until a
Dictabelt recording purportedly of the assassination surfaced
and the Committee revised its conclusion. The new conclusion was
that Oswald had fired three shots, of which the last two struck
the president and were the only shots to have done so. However, on
the basis of the new acoustic evidence, the committee believed
that a second gunman had fired a fourth shot, which missed the
president. The inferred existence of second gunman automatically
made the assassination a conspiracy.
The acoustic evidence which the HCSA used for its conclusion
has since been called into question, and some believe it is not a
recording of the assassination at all.
The staff director and chief counsel for the United States House
Select Committee on Assassinations,
G. Robert Blakey, told ABC News that at least 20 persons heard
a shot from the
grassy knoll, and that the conclusion that a conspiracy
existed in the assassination was established by both the witness
testimony and acoustic evidence. In 2004, he expressed less
confidence in the acoustic evidence.
Officer H.B. McLain, from whose motorcycle radio the HSCA acoustic
experts said the Dictabelt evidence came,
has repeatedly stated that he was not yet in Dealey Plaza at the
time of the assassination.
McLain asked the Committee, "‘If it was my radio on my motorcycle,
why did it not record the revving up at high speed plus my siren
when we immediately took off for Parkland Hospital?’”
The HSCA was unable to identify any other gunman or the extent of
the conspiracy. It also had insufficient evidence to identify any
group responsible.
In 1982, a group of twelve
scientists appointed by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS),
led by Professor Norman Ramsey of Harvard University, concluded
that the acoustic evidence and the team behind its submission to
the HSCA was "seriously flawed." While the NAS said that the HSCA
acoustical evidence was flawed, a 2001 peer-reviewed article in
Science and Justice, the journal of Britain's Forensic Science
Society, said that the NAS investigation was itself flawed. The
article's author, Dr. Donald B. Thomas, a government scientist and
JFK assassination researcher, concluded, with a 96.3 percent
certainty, that there were at least two gunmen firing at President
Kennedy and that one of the shots came from the grassy knoll in
front of Kennedy. Commenting on the British study, United States
House Select Committee on Assassinations staff director and chief
counsel G. Robert Blakey said: "This is an honest, careful
scientific examination of everything we did, with all the
appropriate statistical checks."
Possible motives
The Warren Commission could not ascribe any one motive or group
of motives to Oswald's actions:
It is apparent, however, that Oswald was moved by an
overriding hostility to his environment. He does not appear to
have been able to establish meaningful relationships with
other people. He was perpetually discontented with the world
around him. Long before the assassination he expressed his
hatred for American society and acted in protest against it.
Oswald's search for what he conceived to be the perfect
society was doomed from the start. He sought for himself a
place in history — a role as the "great man" who would be
recognized as having been in advance of his times. His
commitment to Marxism and communism appears to have been
another important factor in his motivation. He also had
demonstrated a capacity to act decisively and without regard
to the consequences when such action would further his aims of
the moment. Out of these and the many other factors which may
have molded the character of Lee Harvey Oswald there emerged a
man capable of assassinating President Kennedy.
1981 exhumation
In October 1981 Oswald's body was
exhumed at the behest of British writer Michael Eddowes, with
Marina Oswald Porter's support. He sought to prove a thesis
developed in a 1975 book, Khrushchev Killed Kennedy
(re-published in 1976, in Britain as November 22: How They
Killed Kennedy and in America a year later as The Oswald
File). Eddowes' theory was that during Oswald's stay in the
Soviet Union he was replaced with a Soviet
double named Alek, who was a member of a KGB assassination
squad. Eddowes' claim is that it was this look-alike who killed
Kennedy, and not Oswald. Eddowes's support for his thesis was a
claim that the corpse buried in 1963 in the Shannon Rose Hill
Memorial Park cemetery in
Fort Worth, Texas
did not have a scar that resulted from surgery conducted on Oswald
years before. When Oswald's body was exhumed it was found that the
plain, mole skin-covered pine coffin had ruptured and was filled
with water, leaving the body in an advanced state of decomposition
with partial
skeletonization. The examination positively identified
Oswald's corpse through
dental records, and also detected a
mastoid scar from a childhood operation.
Contrary to reports, the skull of Oswald had been autopsied and
this was confirmed at the exhumation.
Kennedy assassination theories
Critics have not accepted the conclusions of the Warren
Commission and have proposed a number of
other theories, which assert that Oswald conspired with others
or was not involved at all and was framed. One government
investigation, the HSCA, ruled out many of these theories but
concluded that, while Oswald was the assassin, Kennedy was
"probably" killed as the result of a conspiracy. However, the HSCA
report did not identify any probable co-conspirators and its
conclusion has been criticised for its reliance upon
acoustic evidence that has been called into question.
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